Home Blog Page 905

Tinubu will rescue remaining Chibok Girls, others – Buhari

IN what appears like an admission of failure by his administration to rescue the remaining ‘Chibok Girls’ from insurgents’ captivity, President Muhammadu Buhari has thrown the gauntlet at the incoming administration of the President-elect, Bola Tinubu, to rescue the schoolchildren and others that terrorists abducted under his government.

Feting Nigerian children on Saturday for the Children’s Day commemorated in the country on May 27, Buhari said that his own administration spent eight years attempting to rescue all the children abducted during the administrations of his predecessor, Goodluck Jonathan and others before him.


READ ALSO:
’37 Chibok girls’ parents have died since abduction’

We are committed to recovering Chibok girls still in captivity — FG

Parents of abducted Chibok girls demand daughters’ release

Army rescues two Chibok girls in Borno


In a message on his Twitter handle, the president said, “We must not lose hope, and our faith should be rekindled in the ability of government to safeguard the future of our lives and children.

“In eight years, we have focused on children, negotiating and fighting for the release of many that were taken captive, and painstakingly building intelligence on the whereabouts of others.

“Some have been released; more will come, by God’s grace, as the next administration continues on the same noble path.”

As at the time of filing this report, 93 of the 276 schoolgirls abducted by Boko Haram at the Government Girls Secondary School, Chibok, Borno State, in 2014 during the Jonathan era were still with their captors.

Thirty-seven of the girls’ parents had died.

The ICIR reported earlier today how the Buhari administration recorded 300 per cent more school children abductions than Jonathan’s.

Schoolchildren abducted under President Buhari, who won the 2015 presidential poll mainly because he promised to reverse the nation’s security misfortunes, included the 110 abducted in Government Girls’ Science and Technical College, Dapchi, Yobe State. 

Among the Dapchi schoolchildren is Leah Sharibu, a Christian her abductors held on to because she refused to renounce her faith.

As of February 2021, nearly 900 schoolchildren had been abducted under Buhari alone, less than six years into his government. More had been abducted, and a few remain with their captors.

When campaigning for the presidency in 2015, Buhari had said, “I have had the opportunity to serve my country in the military up to the highest level, as a major-general and as commander-in-chief of the armed forces. In the course of my service, I defended the territorial integrity of Nigeria, and if called upon to do so again, I shall rise to the occasion.

“As a father, I feel the pain of the victims of insurgency, kidnapping and violence. Under my watch, no force, external or internal, will occupy even an inch of Nigerian soil. I will give it all it takes to ensure that our girls kidnapped from Chibok are rescued and reintegrated with their families,” Buhari said.

The ICIR reports that the President did not keep his word.

Judging from Nigerians’ reactions to his administration’s handling of the nation’s security, most citizens believe the nation experienced unprecedented insecurity under his watch.

On Thursday, May 25, The ICIR reported a civil society organisation, Global Rights saying that between 2019 and 2022, Nigeria witnessed a surge in violence, resulting in the tragic loss of thousands of lives and the abduction of countless individuals.

“At least, 20,431 civilians and security personnel have been killed, and 12,944 people have been abducted during this period,” the organisation said.

Different parts of Nigeria, including Plateau and Benue states (in the North-Central),  Kaduna, Katsina, Zamfara and Sokoto states (in the North-West), and Imo, Enugu, Anambra and Ebonyi (in the South-East) have been killing fields, where thousands of Nigerians have died from insecurity-related causes under Buhari administration.

In Ogun, Oyo, Ondo, Osun, Ekiti and Lagos states, ritualists, fraudsters and other criminals have had field days.

Cultists have been on the rampage in the South-South, as the North-East begins to recover from the horrors of a decade of rampage by terrorists.

For the first time in the nation’s history, the South-West experienced waves of herdsmen and insurgents’ attacks, under Buhari.

In June 2022, attackers descended on worshippers at the St Francis’ Catholic Church in Owo, Ondo State, shot sporadically at worshippers and reportedly detonated a bomb, killing about 40 worshippers.

The ICIR reported how killings escalated a few days before the end of the president’s tenure in the North-Central. Large-scale killings by non-state actors have been recorded in Kaduna, Plateau, Nasarawa and Benue states in the past weeks.

report published by The ICIR  on May 21 detailed key security issues and killings under the President.

 

Buhari defends debt profile, says loans funded assets, investment

PRESIDENT Mohammed Buhari has urged Nigerians to consider the assets and investments gained in the last eight years when discussing the country’s huge debt profile.

As Buhari maintained, debts that his administration acquired funded many major assets and investments.

Buhari said this in a statement posted on Twitter on Saturday, May 27.

The ICIR had reported that every Nigerian would owe N384,864 by the time the president leaves office due to the country’s spiralling debt profile.

According to the Debt Management Office (DMO), the Buhari administration would, by its persistent borrowings, be leaving a humongous debt of N77 trillion for the incoming administration.

Data from the Budget Office of the Federation showed that the total budget deficit would hit N47.43 trillion under President Buhari.

According to the figures, deficit financing has risen by 370.54 per cent, moving from N2.41 trillion in 2016 to N11.34 trillion in 2023.

Buhari, who is set to hand over to the incoming administration on Monday, May 29, asked Nigerians to consider the assets and investments when looking at the current debts.

The President pointed out that his administration doubled Nigeria’s infrastructure stock to gross domestic product (GDP) from 20 per cent to more than 40 per cent.

He said, “As we look at Nigeria’s debt profile, I urge us to also look at the assets and investment profiles, some of which were paid for by debt and some by investment income.

“In eight years, I am proud to say that we have doubled Nigeria’s stock of infrastructure to GDP from about 20% to over 40%.

“This growth is no small undertaking given that it was recorded amid a plunge in global oil prices, a recession in the country, and a war in Europe.

“This happened when global oil prices plunged to almost zero when we encountered a recession that was not predicted, when we dealt with a pandemic that was unforeseen and when we are still grappling with the global effects of an ongoing war in Europe.”

He noted that the road out of poverty was much more arduous without investing in infrastructure.

“The wealth and prosperity of many nations, especially post-war Europe, was built largely on infrastructure and debt redeemed over decades. Some of the projects are commercially self-liquidating,” he added.

 

Will president Tinubu be another post turtle?

0

By Ayodele Akinkuotu

In the course of discussing politics in the United States with a gentleman from the city, an American rancher once quipped that many politicians were like post turtles.

Unfamiliar with the term, the fellow from the city sought an explanation. And the rancher obliged him. When farmers are busy ploughing their fields, they dutifully watch out for turtles. Because of its hard shell, a turtle can ruin the best of farming equipment, thus resulting in additional costs to a farmer.

Once one is sighted, the farmer gets down from his tractor, picks it up and puts it on the fence post of his farm until he is done with the day’s job. For the turtle, the post is like a prison, and it patiently awaits its freedom. So, for many politicians in Nigeria, public office is like the fence post of a farm; it is the people who put these politicians in office. But no sooner do they get there, they simply forget who put them there and why they have been so lifted above their fellow men. Thus for four years, they run around in circles, embark on extravagant and obscene lifestyles. And the society they have been elected to make better remain in perpetual penury.

As May 29, 2023, dawns, Nigerians are reminded that this is the longest stretch of civil rule since independence. Four presidents later, however, the Nation is seemingly rooted to a spot. Perhaps, because our leaders in the last two decades have been nothing more than post turtles.

For instance, in 1999, the power sector was one of the Nation’s daunting challenges. Several decades of negligence of the sector resulted in a situation where a large swathe of the country has continued to suffer severe outages. Therefore, at night, our homes are always in perpetual darkness. And for companies to stay in business, they have to invest humongous resources in generating plants to power their machines.

Twenty-four years later, the situation is worse. And that is in spite of all the overhauling supposedly embarked on in the sector.

Today, a country of 200 million people is said to generate about 5,000 to 10,000 megawatts. And as meagre, as that is for the Continent’s largest economy, the distribution companies are said not to have the capacity to evacuate more than 50 per cent of that.

We understand the story is not as simple as that; the transmission company, which is wholly owned by the government, is believed to be ill-equipped to transmit what is being generated.

Yet, South Africa, with a population of about 60 million people, generates about 60000 megawatts daily; and that country is planning to double that capacity. Thus making it a more attractive destination for investors.

As if that is not enough, as a member of Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries, OPEC, Nigeria is the sixth largest producing crude oil exporter. Yet, we import refined petroleum to power our economy. That’s against the backdrop of four refineries that are perpetually comatose.

Thus whenever the international oil market sneezes, the country catches cold. Whereas, high oïl prices should be a boom to our economy, it has become a curse.

In an attempt to cushion the pump price of imported fuel, the government has been subsidising its price for decades. In the last two decades, the subsidy regime has become a scandalous affair.

Today, government subsidy runs into trillions of naira, and sometimes it outstrips the revenue generated from oil exports. The Nation is waiting with bated breath to see how the Bola Tinubu administration handles the subsidy issue.

Although the incoming President belongs to the ruling party, experts expect him to handle the situation better than outgoing Muhammadu Buhari. This is in a situation where manifestos of political parties are mere deceptions to hoodwink the electorate.

Since 1999, every President we have had run his own show allowing the party’s manifesto to gather dust on the shelves in the secretariat. And in the ensuing confusion of what governance has become in Nigeria, nobody remembers what the party in power promised the people. Rather, the presidents substitute their own hurriedly assembled “agenda”, which is largely implemented in the breach.

It is doubtful if Buhari ever took a look at the APC manifesto. His campaign promise in 2015 focused on combating insecurity, corruption in government and reviving the economy.

Eight years later, his scorecard on security leaves much to be desired. In fact, his traducers would say he worsened it with his nepotism. Though at his swearing-in in 2015, he declared that “I belong to nobody and I belong to everybody”. With his poor handling of the Fulani herders and Farmers’ clashes, and his loading the top hierarchy of the security services with men from a particular ethnic group, we all now know to whom Buhari belongs.

After eight years in office, his legacy is a more fractured Nation than the one he took over at his assumption of power. And talking about his fight against corruption, it is doubtful whether he indeed achieved much.

Although the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission was very active in going after those who have dipped their hands into the till, the fact that the bosses of the Commission itself has at various times been accused of what they are fighting against speaks volume of the success of the war.

Outgoing Governor Bello Matawalle of Zamfara State has accused AbdulRashid Bawa, EFCC’s executive chairman, of demanding two million dollars from him. That allegation reminds us that Bawa’s predecessor in office, Ibrahim Magu, was relieved of his office because of corruption allegations.

So, if the EFCC gold, the number one anti-corruption fighter, is rusting what will ordinary iron do? And as regards the economy, nothing paints the despair it is in better than the free fall of the Naira against the dollar in the last few years.

So, against this backdrop, is the incoming President going to be another post-turtle? Although, during the campaigns, Tinubu did say he would continue from where Buhari stopped, deep in his heart, he knew Buhari has underperformed on all fronts.

Even the outgoing President wondered aloud why those who should be trumpeting his achievements from the rooftops were not doing so. To many Nigerians, Buhari tried his best, but it was not good enough for Nigeria. That was why, rather than trumpet Buhari’s “achievements”, Tinubu’s campaign team focused on his achievements in Lagos in his two-term tenure as governor.

Furthermore, since he left office in 2007, the template for the government he left as a legacy is what all the three administrations that came after him are still using. And no matter what Tinubu’s traducers may say, not a few believe Lagos, the City State, is the better for it.

Thus, the incoming President is not going to be a post-turtle, who will be totally bemused as to what he is doing in Aso Rock. God helping him, he has promised to hit the ground running.

In respect of the economy, he has promised a revival of the manufacturing sector. To quote him, “we seek a minimum of six per cent growth annually through reforms of our industrial policy, infrastructure enhancement, power sector innovations, and significant budgetary reforms.”  Those reforms will result in job creation, reduce brain drain, stop crude oil theft, and cut the country’s penchant for borrowing. Right now, the country’s debt burden is very alarming, the greater percentage of which was incurred in the last few years under President Buhari.

One crucial matter waiting for the new President to tackle with urgency is the fuel imports to power the economy. Since the last quarter of 2022, fuel queues have become a nasty recurring decimal all over the country. Thus, many Nigerians spend many hours at filling stations to fuel their vehicles or to buy fuel in jerry cans to power their homes and small businesses.

Those queues may be about to disappear. Why? On Monday, May 22, 2023,  Buhari commissioned the newly built Dangote Oil refinery in Lagos. It has a capacity to refine 650,000 barrels of crude oil daily. That should largely reduce if not totally put an end to fuel importation.

It will be a great relief for Nigerians and the dawn of a new era. This milestone comes 16 years after Aliko Dangote, leading a Consortium of investors, purchased the NNPC’s three refineries for 750 million dollars in the twilight of Obasanjo’s government. But no sooner than his successor, President Umaru Musa Yar’Adua assumed power did vociferous calls from labour and civil society organisations demand that the deal should be cancelled.

The then group managing director of the NNPC added his voice, promising late President Yar’Adua that he could revive the refineries and put them on winning ways. Yar’Adua returned the consortium’s money. Today, those refineries are said to be in a worse situation than they were 16 years ago. The incoming President should end the regime of the conduit of waste that those refineries have become.

Another issue demanding Tinubu’s immediate attention is the insecurity in the land. While the Buhari government claimed that insurgency and kidnapping had been largely degraded, but banditry and mindless killings are still rampant. In the wake of the general elections, there was another bloodbath in the North Central geopolitical zone. And a so-called Fulani group claimed responsibility.

Till date, not much is known about what the security services had done to arrest the culprits. Because they have been largely allowed to go on the rampage when it suits them, the blood-thirsty criminals continue unabated. Nigerians are, therefore, relying on Tinubu’s promise to rejig the security apparatus.

Beyond that, within the shortest time possible, he needs to set in motion a process to reconcile Nigerians who are aggrieved, and who if given the opportunity would want to opt out of the Federation. Certainly, the task ahead of him is daunting, but having prepared for many years for this Number One spot, Tinubu, warts and all, cannot afford to fail.

Allison-Madueke slams N100bn defamation suit on EFCC, Malami’s office

THE Minister of Petroleum Resources in former Nigeria’s president Goodluck Jonathan’s administration, Diezani Alison-Madueke, has sued the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) and the Office of the Attorney-General of the Federation N100 billion for libel and defamation.

Alison-Madueke was represented by a team of her lawyers headed by Mike Ozekhome, a senior advocate, in the suit marked CV/6272/2023, filed at the High Court of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) on Friday, May 26.

The EFCC and Attorney-General’s Office are the first and second respondents in the suit.

The former minister, arguably the most vilified of Jonathan’s aides for corruption by the President Muhammadu Buhari government, is demanding a public apology to be published in three major national dailies, and an order by the court to stop the respondents from further defaming her.

She informed the court she had been away from Nigeria after leaving office in 2015 to manage, in the United Kingdom, “the most aggressive form of breast cancer”.

The ICIR reports that Buhari’s largely-unsuccessful fight against corruption has its roots in the arms procurement fund, which exposed much rot in Jonathan’s government, and its incapacity to contain the Boko Haram insurgency that spiralled and worsened the nation’s insecurity under Buhari.

Buhari leaves office on May 29 with the minister of Justice and Attorney-General of the Federation, Abubakar Malami, whose office is the second respondent in Alison-Madueke’s suit.

She said in the suit that the first and second respondents had on December 16, 2021 made a libellous and defamatory publication about her titled, ‘Diezani: EFCC uncovers additional $72.8 million in Fidelity Bank’, and “maliciously wrote, authored and/or caused to be written, authored, or published to the whole world at large of and concerning the claimant, through the 1st Defendant’s online official website through which they falsely and maliciously described the claimant as a common criminal who looted public funds belonging to the Federal Republic of Nigeria for her personal gain.”

She added, “In a publication made on August 8, 2017, by the 1st and 2nd defendants, titled ‘Unbelievable!!! EFCC traces N47.2 Billion, $487.5 Million to ex-Minister Diezani Alison-Madueke’, the 1st and 2nd defendants falsely and maliciously wrote, authored and or/caused to be written, authored, or published to the whole world at large through the 1st defendant’s online platform, a false and insidious story ….wherein they falsely and maliciously described the claimant thus: ‘It seems Mrs Diezani Alison-Madueke, until recently, Minister of Petroleum Resources, going by the sheer amount of her acquisition of gold and diamonds, may have been fighting a spirited war against millions of compatriots who are heavily and unevenly yoked by crass poverty.”

According to her, the publications and many others diminished her person and lowered her esteem before the right-thinking public, adding that many people who saw the publications called her and expressed disappointment with her alleged ‘dubious character.’

Among others, the claimant is seeking an order restraining the 1st and 2nd respondents, whether acting by themselves, servants, agents, operatives or by whomever and howsoever from distributing or further distributing, publishing or further publishing in any form or manner, the same or similar offensive, libellous materials or stories of or concerning her.

She is, therefore, demanding, “An order directing the defendants jointly and severally to pay to the claimant the sum of N100,000,000,000.00 (100 billion naira) only as damages for the false, injurious, malicious and libellous publications against the claimant in the 1st defendant’s publishing platform, and at the instance of both the 1st and the 2nd defendants.”

In May 2021, The ICIR reported how the EFCC claimed that the pieces of jewellery found in the claimant’s home were worth N14.4 billion.


READ ALSO:


In another report that year, the commission said it found $153 million and 80 houses related to her.

Earlier, a court had ordered the permanent forfeiture of N34 billion linked to her.

In a similar ruling in 2019, a court ordered the permanent forfeiture of her jewellery and an iPhone.

Buhari’s toothache and a nation in its death throes 

0

By Chido Onumah 

Muhammadu Buhari, a retired general, will leave office on May 29 after eight uneventful years. We hope it is the last time we hear from a man who rode to power eight years ago promising to end insecurity, strengthen the economy and fight corruption, none of which he achieved.

Thankfully, he has vowed not to intervene in our national life and expressed his willingness to disappear to the Niger Republic if we request accountability after almost a decade of ruinous leadership.   

It is a fitting testament to the leadership calamity of the past eight years that Buhari was in a London hospital two weeks to the end of his eight-year tenure, this time to treat toothache. He is ending his misrule much the same way he started it.

The only thing that seems to have improved since he became president on May 29, 2015, is his health and his family fortune.  

While Buhari has spent the last eight years taking care of himself and his health, he has left the country prostrate; more corrupt, more insecure, and more divided than he met it eight years ago. The only thing that seems to have improved since he became president on May 29, 2015, is his health and his family fortune.  

Thanks to Dataphyte, a media research and data analytics organisation, we know that since 2016, Buhari has budgeted a total of N7.7billion (about $16.7million), at the official exchange of N461 to a dollar, for the presidential clinic. A breakdown of this figure shows that N2.027 billion ($4.3milion) was for recurrent expenditure while N5.6 billion ($ 12.3 million) was for capital expenditure. In 2021,  Buhari approved the construction and equipping of a 14-bed space presidential clinic at a cost of N21 billion ($ 45.5 million).  

Last November, the retired general  was in London on a “routine medical check-up.” Nigerians have lost count of the number of days Buhari has spent in London on medical tourism since he came to power.

According to a professor, Farooq A. Kperogi, in a November 2022 essay titled, “Buhari Misunderstood King Charles—and Burns Nigeria on His Way Out,” Buhari’s frequent London trips “while pretending to be president of Nigeria,” may have provoked the question by England’s King Charles III if Buhari had a home in London.  

It is almost forty years since Buhari overthrew the democratically elected government of Shehu Shagari, truncating Nigeria’s Second Republic. One of the reasons Buhari and his coterie gave for their treasonable act was to tackle “the great economic predicament and uncertainty, which an inept and corrupt leadership has imposed on our beloved nation for the past four years.” 

A brigadier general, Sani Abacha (later, military dictator from 1993-1998), read the coup speech—purportedly on behalf of the Nigerian Armed Forces—that formally ended the government of the then president, Shehu Shagari (1979-1983). Abacha spoke of “the harsh, intolerable conditions under which we are now living.”  

“Our economy has been hopelessly mismanaged; we have become a debtor and beggar nation [sound familiar?]. There is inadequacy of food at reasonable prices for our people who are now fed up with endless announcements of importation of foodstuff; health services are in shambles as our hospitals are reduced to mere consulting clinics (emphasis mine) without drugs, water and equipment,” he told a beleaguered nation. 

Less than two years later, another general, Ibrahim Badamosi Babangida, would give the same reasons for overthrowing the regime of Buhari.  

The last twenty months have not witnessed any significant changes in the national economy. Contrary to expectations, we have so far been subjected to a steady deterioration in the general standard of living; and intolerable suffering by the ordinary Nigerians have risen higher, scarcity of commodities has increased, hospitals still remain mere consulting clinics (emphasis mine), while educational institutions are on the brink of decay. Unemployment has stretched to critical dimensions,” Babangida averred in his August 27, 1985, coup speech.  

Babangida ruled for eight years. In 2009, sixteen years after he “stepped aside,” he lost his wife, the delectable First Lady, Maryam Babangida, at the City Hope Hospital, California, USA, after years of battling ovarian cancer. Babangida was reported to be by her side when she died. As military president, Babangida spent time in France for surgery—one of many subsequent overseas surgeries—for treatment of radiculopathy (pinched nerve), a medical condition in which “one or more nerves are affected and do not work properly.” 

When you hear or read the reasons these soldiers of fortune gave for upturning the constitution and how they ended up violating our fundamental freedoms and savaging the country, you want to weep for Nigeria.  

Eight years ago, some Nigerians took a chance on Buhari. They were willing to replace a weak and rudderless president with one who vowed that he was a born-again-democrat, a man of integrity. He would end up dividing us into a country of 97 and 5 per cent. It is trite to say Nigerians have been terribly disappointed; it is a great understatement to say that the cheque of tackling corruption and insecurity and building prosperity promised eight years ago has been nothing but a dud cheque. 

Today, the country is broken almost beyond repair. Corruption is rife. We are a debtor nation, a deeply fractured one at that. The country is more divided today than at any other time, and I am not talking about political division. Not since the civil war have we witnessed the level of division, fear and loathing we are experiencing today. Indeed, we are facing an existential crisis.  

Make no mistake, the trouble with Nigeria did not start with Gen. Buhari (retd.) The trouble has been there from the outset.   

Part of the solution to the trouble with Nigeria is effective and selfless leadership.

Unfortunately, the leadership recruitment process in Nigeria is as polluted as the gutters of the major streets of the country. a professor, Chinua Achebe, in his 1983 book, The Trouble with Nigeria, noted that, “I know enough history to realise that civilisation does not fall down from the sky; it has always been the result of people’s toil and sweat, the fruit of their long search for order and justice under brave and enlightened leaders.”

Of course, Nigeria can redeem itself. But a nation can only have so many chances to redeem itself. Nigeria is certainly running out of chances. Time is running out on what some people like to call the Nigerian project. Everywhere you turn to, you are confronted with poverty, decay, corruption, injustice, lawlessness, impunity, nepotism, and insecurity, occasioned by a bankrupt elite—certified scoundrels in every sense of the word—for whom enlightened self-interest means absolutely nothing, who have occupied the political space and are holding the country by the jugular. The educational system has all but collapsed; health services are in shambles. If our hospitals were “consulting clinics” four decades ago when the current monstrosity truncated the Second Republic, today they are death chambers.  

Unfortunately, there is no let-up in this quest for redemption. Of course, the challenge today is how to pull the country from the brink, save its beleaguered citizens, and restore the dignity of Africa and the Black race. 

We must do it, by any means necessary! 

This essay is an excerpt from the introduction of an up-coming book: By Any Means Necessary: Rogue Elte, State Capture, and the Transformation of Nigeria.  

Onumah writes from Abuja and can be reached onumah@hotmail.com

Buhari’s administration records 300% more school children abductions than Jonathan’s

PRESIDENT Muhammadu Buhari boasted he would rescue all 276 schoolgirls that terrorists kidnapped in Chibok, Borno State, during former President Goodluck Jonathan’s administration, but he has failed in that talk as he is leaving office with 96 girls remaining with their captors.

Buhari, who leaves office on May 29, vowed while campaigning for the presidential position in 2015 that he would ensure the girls return safely to their parents soon.

He assured Nigerians he would make the country a safe nation if Nigerians elected him.


READ ALSO:


“I have had the opportunity to serve my country in the military up to the highest level, as a major-general and as commander-in-chief of the armed forces. In the course of my service, I defended the territorial integrity of Nigeria, and if called upon to do so again, I shall rise to the occasion.

“As a father, I feel the pain of the victims of insurgency, kidnapping and violence. Under my watch, no force, external or internal, will occupy even an inch of Nigerian soil. I will give it all it takes to ensure that our girls kidnapped from Chibok are rescued and reintegrated with their families,” Buhari said.

The ICIR reports that the President did not keep his word. Apart from failing to rescue the Chibok schoolgirls, insurgents and other criminals had whisked away approximately 900 children from their schools during his eight years in office.

This makes the population of kidnapped schoolchildren under the President triple the 276 Chibok schoolgirls whisked away under Jonathan, his predecessor.

The data for Jonathan’s government do not include nearly 100 students that terrorists murdered in two schools in Yobe state during his tenure.

The first was an attack on a Government Secondary School in the village of Mamudo, Yobe state, in 2013, in which saw at least, 42 people were killed, including students.

The second terror was at the state’s Federal Government College of Buni Yadi in 2014. The attackers burnt or slaughtered 59 schoolchildren, who were all boys.

Madagali, in Adamawa State, was one of the worst-hit towns during the Boko Haram insurgency

The number of kidnapped school children under President Buhari is in addition to thousands of citizens who died from insecurity-related incidents during his tenure.

They also add to hundreds of orphaned children and thousands of citizens that insurgency or other conflicts under his government displaced.

In February 2021, The ICIR reported how terrorists kidnapped 881 school children and students under Buhari’s watch in less than seven years.

A report shows over 10,000 people died from insecurity-related causes in 2021 alone in Nigeria.

The ICIR reported how 287 people were killed in five months through similar reasons in the South-East, one of the country’s six regions, in 2021. 

Similarly, this organisation reported how over 80,000 Nigerians fled to the Niger Republic in three months during the President’s term.

As Buhari leaves office, killings and abductions have surged after the 2023 elections, especially in the North-Central, where three of the six states making up the region have persistently faced attacks from non-state actors. The states are Plateau, Nasarawa and Benue.

Gunmen stormed the Gitata district of Karu Local Government Area of Nasarawa State on May 12 and mowed down about 40 farmers, including women and children.

Sources claimed the onslaught was an escalation of a similar attack on Tattara Mada and Angwan Barau communities in the Kokona local government area in the state in April, where 20 persons reportedly died and property worth millions were destroyed.

In Plateau state, a yet-to-be-arrested group pounced on the Bwoi District of Mangu local government area of Plateau sd,tate on May 16 and killed dozens of residents.

That tragedy adds to other villagers murdered the same day in Adaka village in Makurdi local government and in the Ijaha community of Apa local government area of Benue State, where a report said nine people died. 

Plateau and Benue states (in the North-Central), as well as Kaduna, Katsina, and Zamfara states in the North-West have been killing fields, where thousands of Nigerians have died from insecurity-related causes during the Buhari administration.

Parents besieged Government Science Secondary School, Kankara, Katsina State, after terrorists abducted over 300 school children in the school in December 2021.
Source: BBC

The killings have negatively affected education in the states. In January 2022, The ICIR reported how parents withdrew their children from schools in Kaduna and Niger states because of insecurity.

In Zamfara state, this organisation also reported in October 2022 how 30 schools remained shut after one year. The government had opened 45 of the 75 schools it shut after a year.

Challenges such as these are part of the reasons Nigeria has 20 million out-of-school children, the highest number globally.

Hundreds of the nation’s security and paramilitary forces fighting to dislodge terrorists and other criminals also died. The Punch newspaper reported in January that 2,140 soldiers, police officers, and others were killed during the President’s tenure.

Insecurity takes different forms under Buhari across the geo-political zones. Though he inherited the menace, many Nigerians believe the situation worsened during his tenure – against their expectation that he would contain it as a retired military general and a former Head of State.

Banditry and kidnapping reign in the North-West and North-Central, and there were still pockets of insurgency in the North-East as of 2022.

‘Unknown gunmen’ take charge of the South-East, killing people and grounding businesses, while ritual killings surged in the South-West with the attendant human toll.

But there has been relative peace in the South-South, where agitators for (petroleum) resource control had wreaked havoc in the past. The region has been largely peaceful because of the Federal government’s empowerment programmes for the repentant militants. Ex-militants also secured juicy contracts from the Buhari government to monitor oil infrastructures.

In 2022, The ICIR reported how terrorists attacked 18 correctional centres and released inmates, including other terrorists across Nigeria, under the President’s watch.

In July 2022, suspected insurgents attacked the Presidential Guards Brigade in the nation’s capital, a situation that forced the National Assembly to threaten to impeach him.

Kidnapped school children and staff of Government Science Secondary School, Kagara, Niger state, in 2021

Buhari records significant success in containing insurgency in North-East, but insecurity festers in other parts of Nigeria

Buhari inherited a nation blanketed by terrorist attacks, especially in three North-East states: Borno, Yobe and Adamawa.

In addition to the three states, the terrorists attacked Kano. They also struck the United Nations building in Abuja on August 27, 2011, and another barrage by the group consumed the Police Headquarters in the nation’s capital on July 16, 2012, killing many people, while many fires that erupted from the attack destroyed many assets. 

The last major insurgent attack in Nigeria occurred around the Lake Chad region in March, where more than 30 civilians reportedly died. 

But Buhari has arguably contained insurgency by the terrorist groups, Boko Haram and Islamic West Africa Province (ISWAP), even if other forms of heinous criminality that consume lives have festered across the country.

As Buhari hands over to the President-elect, Bola Tinubu, on May 29, parents of Chibok schoolgirls who are yet to have their children back from captivity will no doubt be more hopeless and sadder about how President Buhari has failed to make good his vow to rescue their children from their captors.

FG declares May 29 work-free day

0

THE Federal Government has declared Monday 29 a work-free day for all workers in the country.

A statement from the Minister of Interior, Rauf Aregbesola, on Friday, May 26, said the gesture was to commemorate the inauguration of the President-elect, Bola Tinubu.

The minister enjoined Nigerians to continue to support and promote democracy through adherence to the rule of law.

Parts of the statement read, “The Minister felicitates with all Nigerians on the momentous occasion, commending them for their faith in democracy as expressed in the nationwide election that produced the President and his Deputy being inaugurated and indeed in all elections across the nation.

“He said democracy anywhere is an unfinished business and the only way it can keep developing and serve its end of being the vehicle to good governance and the welfare of all the people is by adhering to its tenets of the rule of law, supporting democratic institutions, promotion of free and responsible press and advancement of the frontiers of freedom for all the people.

“Aregbesola urged Nigerians also to continue to promote ideals of peaceful coexistence and love for our neighbours, noting that we can only practice democracy and enjoy its dividends in a peaceful environment.”

The Minister, however, commended all Nigerians for their efforts at achieving an unbroken civilian rule and successful change of governments since 1999.

He urged Nigerians to support the in-coming administration, adding that the unbounded energy of the people is the nation’s greatest strength and will take the nation to its greatest height when it is positively deployed in its service.

Aregbesola further charged Nigerians to shun any form of violence and other untoward acts, assuring them that with all hands on deck, the future is very bright when the nation will attain greatness in all facets of human development.

The ICIR reported that Bola Ahmed Tinubu was announced the president elect by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) on March 1.

Tinubu, candidate of the All Progressives Congress (APC), was announced the winner of the presidential election after polling the highest number votes.

Over 1.6 million Nigerians trapped in modern slavery — Report

A REPORT by an international human rights group, Walk Free, has stated that more than 1.6 million Nigerians are trapped in modern slavery.

According to the report, Nigeria ranked fifth among countries with the highest number of people in modern slavery in Africa.

The report, released on Wednesday, May 24, revealed that an estimated 50 million people across the world are living in situations of modern slavery.


READ ALSO:

Modern slavery: Nigeria ranks highest in Africa

Modern Day Slavery: Nigerian women warned against finding jobs in Britain

Torture, modern slavery of Almajiri children in northern Nigeria

Organ trafficking: UK court jails Ekweremadu, wife, doctor


The report titled ‘The Global Slavery Index 2023’ noted that approximately 28 million people are in forced labour while 22 million are in forced marriages.

Walk Free said the largest estimated numbers of people in modern slavery are found in India, China, North Korea, Pakistan, Russia, Indonesia, Nigeria, Türkiye, Bangladesh, and the United States.

It said the countries collectively account for two in every three people living in modern slavery and over half the world’s population.

The increasing number of people in modern slavery was attributed to the struggle to provide basic needs and safely seek protection as conflict damages infrastructure and disrupts services.

“Those who try to flee conflict affected areas may be targeted by traffickers at any point on their journey. The countries with protracted conflicts have some of the highest overall vulnerability to modern slavery, and relatedly, a high prevalence of modern slavery.

“These countries include Afghanistan, Syria, Nigeria, Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), Mali, Pakistan, Iraq, Central African Republic, Sudan, and Libya.”

The lingering terrorism in the North-East and North-West regions of Nigeria increases the vulnerability of Nigerian children and women to modern slavery, the report observed.

Nigeria, DRC and South Sudan were listed as three countries facing protracted conflict and widespread displacement. Surveys on experiences of modern slavery and related abuses were conducted among IDPs residing in displacement sites in North Kivu province in the DRC, South Sudan, and North-East Nigeria.

The report added: “An estimated one in 60 IDPs in North-East Nigeria experienced at least one of these slavery related abuses. In North-East Nigeria, Boko Haram and its factions have recruited thousands of children to undertake support roles or engage in violence, including suicide attacks.

“The group has also abducted girls to be forcibly married or provide sexual services to its members.

“Nigerian girls seeking employment as domestic helpers to help pay for schooling are also subjected to domestic servitude.”

Noting that breakdown in the rule of law enables perpetrators to act with impunity, Walk Free explained the parties involved in conflict recruit children into their ranks, forcibly marry women and girls to their members, or force civilians to perform labour or sexual services.

The report stressed that Nigeria in past years had been proactive in its response to modern slavery.

“Over the past four years, many African countries have taken actions to improve their response to modern slavery. Nigeria and South Africa have taken the most action, while Eritrea and Libya have taken the least.”

According to the report, the number of orphanage homes in Nigeria contributed immensely to modern slavery.

“In Nigeria, some orphanages have been linked to “baby factories,” where traffickers hold women against their will, rape them, and force them to carry and deliver a child for the purpose of selling.”

However, the report also stated that assessment conducted showed that Nigeria had the strongest responses against modern slavery in Africa.

“Nigeria (54 per cent), South Africa (53 per cent), and Rwanda (50 per cent) have the strongest responses to modern slavery in the region. Nigeria and South Africa both strongly address risk factors to modern slavery and provide adequate protection to citizens overseas.”

The report equally noted that Nigerians had a 76 per cent level of vulnerability to modern slavery.

An investigation by The ICIR revealed that there is an increasing incidence of child abuses, molestation of children and the wrong practice of the Almajiri school system across some northern states in Nigeria. Kano, Kaduna and Jigawa states had the highest cases of molestation of Almajiri children.

The ICIR investigation noted that policy measures introduced to modernise and reform the Almajiri system have been rebuffed.

UNICEF in 2001, underscored the need for individual northern states to eliminate the Almajiri phenomenon.

The beginning of Tinubu’s govt will be difficult, Shettima warns

PRESIDENT-elect Bola Tinubu’s administration may experience a rocky start due to the number of challenges bedeviling the country, Vice President-elect, Kashim Shettima, has warned.

Shettima said this in an address delivered on Friday at the 2023 Presidential Inauguration Public Lecture at the National Mosque, Abuja.

In an attempt to lower expectations, Shettima said the incoming administration has an enormous task ahead and a myriad of issues to resolve.


READ ALSO:

Why Buhari’s economic model failed to lift most Nigerians out of poverty

Economic challenges jack up Dangote refinery’s construction cost 100%

Prioritise ease of doing business before tight monetary policy, economists tell FG, CBN

How the economy lost almost N10trn to naira redesign – former NBS chief


He noted that the process might make the beginning of the new regime a difficult one.

Shettima said subsidy removal and the multiple exchange rate system, among others, are serious challenges that the administration must surmount.

He also noted that the incoming administration does not have the luxury of time to tackle these challenges.

“The starting point might not be rosy, let me be very honest with you. The oil subsidy has become an albatross around our necks. The multiple exchange rates system is a drain on the national economy and creates a dual economic system,” he said.

“As the Chinese will say, ‘The worst curse that a Chinese man may wish on you is for you to live in interesting times.’ And indeed, we are living in interesting times.”

But he assured Nigerians that Tinubu would tackle these challenges and hit the ground running.

“Rest assured that in time, Nigerians will come to pay glowing tributes to Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu. We’re here — leaders — not because of our intellect. Neither Kashim Shettima nor Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu holds any PhD degree. We are what we are not because of our physical powers. We are what we are, not because of our political sagacity. There are better politicians.

“Power, to us, will be a humbling experience. It’s an opportunity to serve God and humanity. And whether we accept it or not, we are going to spend more years of our lives outside power than in power,” he added.

On May 29, President Muhammadu Buhari will vacate the Aso Rock Presidential Villa and hand over to Tinubu.

The ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) candidate had been declared the winner of the presidential election after polling 8,794,726 votes.

According to the Independent Electoral Commission, Tinubu had over 25 per cent of the votes cast in 30 states, more than the 24 states constitutionally required.

INEC said Atiku Abubakar of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) came second in the election with 6,984,520 votes. While Labour Party candidate Peter Obi came third with 6,101,533 votes.

NAFDAC destroys N4.2bn fake products in Anambra

THE National Agency for Food, Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC) has destroyed fake, substandard goods and products worth over N4.2 billion in Awka, the Anambra State capital.

The exercise was carried out at the Aswama Dumpsite in Umuzocha, close to the Anambra State secretariat complex, on Friday, May 26.

Some of the products include antibiotics, anti-hypertensive, anti-diabetic, anti-asthmatic, aphrodisiacs, antimalarial, anti-inflammatory, herbal remedies and psychoactive drugs.

Drugs such as analgin, tramadol (above 100mg), gentamycin 280mg and controlled substances, vaccines, alcoholic and non-alcoholic beverages, cosmetics, chemicals and unwholesome food, among others are banned by the regulatory body.

Speaking during the event, the Director-General of NAFDAC Mojisola Adeyeye said the exercise was in line with the agency’s mandate of eradicating fake and other spurious products from circulation in Nigeria.

Adeyeye, who was represented at the event by the Head, Task Force team of NAFDAC, Francis Ononiwu, explained that the exercise was a combined South-East and South-South zonal destruction carried out periodically.

According to her, the products were made up of “spurious, counterfeited, substandard and falsified medicinal products, unwholesome processed food products and several other unsafe regulated products seized from various manufacturers, importers and distributors in the combined team of South-East and South-South zones”.

She also noted that the destruction of the products was to prevent their reintroduction into the distribution chain, adding that the importation, distribution and sales of fake, unsafe and wholesome NAFDAC-regulated products represented a grave onslaught on human life.

Adeyeye said that the agency, by its establishment Act Cap LFN, 2004, was saddled with the responsibility to regulate and control the importation, exportation, manufacture, advertisement, distribution, sale and use of food, drugs and medical products.

She, therefore, solicited the support and cooperation of stakeholders and the public in order to rid the country of fake medicines and other products.

This wasn’t the first time the agency would be destroying fake drugs worth a multimillion naira amount this year.

On February 17, The ICIR reported that NAFDAC destroyed fake drugs and expired products worth over N326 million in Nasarawa State.

The fake products which were seized from pharmaceutical stores and other business enterprises across the states in the North-Central were destroyed on Thursday, February 16 in Lafia, the state capital.

According to Adeyeye, the drugs were confiscated and destroyed to safeguard the health of the entire citizens of the nation.

The NAFDAC DG said, “It is important to note that the importation, distribution and sales of fake and unsafe products represents a grave onslaught on human life.

“Today, we are witnessing the destruction of various categories of regulated products with estimated street value of N326,833,592.80. These products include medicines, foods, cosmetics, either confiscated or voluntarily handed over by complaint companies, non-governmental organisations or trade unions.”